The doctor gave a slow, serious nod.

Carefully, the officer opened the top of Ethan’s hospital gown.

He lifted the thin undershirt beneath.

And everything changed.

The room fell into absolute silence.

It wasn’t just the broken arm.

Ethan’s small body told a different story.

Bruises—old and new.

Yellowing marks shaped like fingers along his ribs.

Thin, angry welts across his back.

Marks no fall could ever cause.

“She didn’t push me,” Ethan said, his voice trembling but stronger now.

He raised his good hand—

And pointed.

Not at me.

At his mother.

“I fell because I felt dizzy,” he said. “I didn’t eat yesterday. Mommy said I cost too much this month.”

A gasp rippled through the room.

Tears rolled down his cheeks.

“She told me… if I didn’t say Emily pushed me… she’d hit me again,” he whispered. “She said the police would make Emily give us money.”

Everything inside me broke—

And healed—

At the same time.

The officer’s grip on my arms loosened.

Then the handcuffs came off.

For the first time since this nightmare started—

I could breathe.

“Wait!” Rebecca screamed, her voice twisting into panic. “He’s lying! She told him what to say! She’s manipulating him!”

The officer’s expression turned ice-cold.